#SEO Core Update
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cubicalseo · 5 months ago
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Google Algorithm Updates 2024: SEO Core Updates
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The Google Search Algorithm is at the root of how online businesses, content creators, and marketers structure their digital approach. In 2024, Google did some major core SEO updates to improve search results quality, user experience, and content relevance. Learn about these Google algorithm updates 2024 to enhance your SEO services.
What are Google Algorithms?
Google algorithms are highly complex systems designed to retrieve data from its search index and deliver the most relevant search engine results for user queries. These search ranking factors enable algorithms to evaluate and rank web pages on SERPs. Initially, Google introduced just a few search engine optimization algorithm updates. Today, multiple algorithm updates affect SERPs. The following article will discuss SEO core updates for 2024, their implications, and the best ways to adapt SEO services accordingly.
Read more: https://www.cubicalseo.com/blog/google-seo-core-algorithm-updates-2024
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searchengineexplorer · 2 years ago
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https://searchengineexplorer.blogspot.com/2023/09/google-wraps-up-august-2023-core-update.html
Google Wraps Up August 2023 Core Update: What It Means for You
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Google has officially completed the rollout of its August 2023 Core Update. This marks the second core update of the year, with the process commencing on August 22, 2023, and concluding 16 days later on September 7, 2023.
This Core updates impacting the website rankings.💡 Analyze data for improvements.🔍 Stay informed for online success. 📈 SEO experts to assess the impact.
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mostlysignssomeportents · 1 year ago
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Google is (still) losing the spam wars to zombie news-brands
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I'm touring my new, nationally bestselling novel The Bezzle! Catch me TONIGHT (May 3) in CALGARY, then TOMORROW (May 4) in VANCOUVER, then onto Tartu, Estonia, and beyond!
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Even Google admits – grudgingly – that it is losing the spam wars. The explosive proliferation of botshit has supercharged the sleazy "search engine optimization" business, such that results to common queries are 50% Google ads to spam sites, and 50% links to spam sites that tricked Google into a high rank (without paying for an ad):
https://developers.google.com/search/blog/2024/03/core-update-spam-policies#site-reputation
It's nice that Google has finally stopped gaslighting the rest of us with claims that its search was still the same bedrock utility that so many of us relied upon as a key piece of internet infrastructure. This not only feels wildly wrong, it is empirically, provably false:
https://downloads.webis.de/publications/papers/bevendorff_2024a.pdf
Not only that, but we know why Google search sucks. Memos released as part of the DOJ's antitrust case against Google reveal that the company deliberately chose to worsen search quality to increase the number of queries you'd have to make (and the number of ads you'd have to see) to find a decent result:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/24/naming-names/#prabhakar-raghavan
Google's antitrust case turns on the idea that the company bought its way to dominance, spending the some of the billions it extracted from advertisers and publishers to buy the default position on every platform, so that no one ever tried another search engine, which meant that no one would invest in another search engine, either.
Google's tacit defense is that its monopoly billions only incidentally fund these kind of anticompetitive deals. Mostly, Google says, it uses its billions to build the greatest search engine, ad platform, mobile OS, etc that the public could dream of. Only a company as big as Google (says Google) can afford to fund the R&D and security to keep its platform useful for the rest of us.
That's the "monopolistic bargain" – let the monopolist become a dictator, and they will be a benevolent dictator. Shriven of "wasteful competition," the monopolist can split their profits with the public by funding public goods and the public interest.
Google has clearly reneged on that bargain. A company experiencing the dramatic security failures and declining quality should be pouring everything it has to righting the ship. Instead, Google repeatedly blew tens of billions of dollars on stock buybacks while doing mass layoffs:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/21/im-feeling-unlucky/#not-up-to-the-task
Those layoffs have now reached the company's "core" teams, even as its core services continue to decay:
https://qz.com/google-is-laying-off-hundreds-as-it-moves-core-jobs-abr-1851449528
(Google's antitrust trial was shrouded in secrecy, thanks to the judge's deference to the company's insistence on confidentiality. The case is moving along though, and warrants your continued attention:)
https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/the-2-trillion-secret-trial-against
Google wormed its way into so many corners of our lives that its enshittification keeps erupting in odd places, like ordering takeout food:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/24/passive-income/#swiss-cheese-security
Back in February, Housefresh – a rigorous review site for home air purifiers – published a viral, damning account of how Google had allowed itself to be overrun by spammers who purport to provide reviews of air purifiers, but who do little to no testing and often employ AI chatbots to write automated garbage:
https://housefresh.com/david-vs-digital-goliaths/
In the months since, Housefresh's Gisele Navarro has continued to fight for the survival of her high-quality air purifier review site, and has received many tips from insiders at the spam-farms and Google, all of which she recounts in a followup essay:
https://housefresh.com/how-google-decimated-housefresh/
One of the worst offenders in spam wars is Dotdash Meredith, a content-farm that "publishes" multiple websites that recycle parts of each others' content in order to climb to the top search slots for lucrative product review spots, which can be monetized via affiliate links.
A Dotdash Meredith insider told Navarro that the company uses a tactic called "keyword swarming" to push high-quality independent sites off the top of Google and replace them with its own garbage reviews. When Dotdash Meredith finds an independent site that occupies the top results for a lucrative Google result, they "swarm a smaller site’s foothold on one or two articles by essentially publishing 10 articles [on the topic] and beefing up [Dotdash Meredith sites’] authority."
Dotdash Meredith has keyword swarmed a large number of topics. from air purifiers to slow cookers to posture correctors for back-pain:
https://housefresh.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/keyword-swarming-dotdash.jpg
The company isn't shy about this. Its own shareholder communications boast about it. What's more, it has competition.
Take Forbes, an actual news-site, which has a whole shadow-empire of web-pages reviewing products for puppies, dogs, kittens and cats, all of which link to high affiliate-fee-generating pet insurance products. These reviews are not good, but they are treasured by Google's algorithm, which views them as a part of Forbes's legitimate news-publishing operation and lets them draft on Forbes's authority.
This side-hustle for Forbes comes at a cost for the rest of us, though. The reviewers who actually put in the hard work to figure out which pet products are worth your money (and which ones are bad, defective or dangerous) are crowded off the front page of Google and eventually disappear, leaving behind nothing but semi-automated SEO garbage from Forbes:
https://twitter.com/ichbinGisele/status/1642481590524583936
There's a name for this: "site reputation abuse." That's when a site perverts its current – or past – practice of publishing high-quality materials to trick Google into giving the site a high ranking. Think of how Deadspin's private equity grifter owners turned it into a site full of casino affiliate spam:
https://www.404media.co/who-owns-deadspin-now-lineup-publishing/
The same thing happened to the venerable Money magazine:
https://moneygroup.pr/
Money is one of the many sites whose air purifier reviews Google gives preference to, despite the fact that they do no testing. According to Google, Money is also a reliable source of information on reprogramming your garage-door opener, buying a paint-sprayer, etc:
https://money.com/best-paint-sprayer/
All of this is made ten million times worse by AI, which can spray out superficially plausible botshit in superhuman quantities, letting spammers produce thousands of variations on their shitty reviews, flooding the zone with bullshit in classic Steve Bannon style:
https://escapecollective.com/commerce-content-is-breaking-product-reviews/
As Gizmodo, Sports Illustrated and USA Today have learned the hard way, AI can't write factual news pieces. But it can pump out bullshit written for the express purpose of drafting on the good work human journalists have done and tricking Google – the search engine 90% of us rely on – into upranking bullshit at the expense of high-quality information.
A variety of AI service bureaux have popped up to provide AI botshit as a service to news brands. While Navarro doesn't say so, I'm willing to bet that for news bosses, outsourcing your botshit scams to a third party is considered an excellent way of avoiding your journalists' wrath. The biggest botshit-as-a-service company is ASR Group (which also uses the alias Advon Commerce).
Advon claims that its botshit is, in fact, written by humans. But Advon's employees' Linkedin profiles tell a different story, boasting of their mastery of AI tools in the industrial-scale production of botshit:
https://housefresh.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Advon-AI-LinkedIn.jpg
Now, none of this is particularly sophisticated. It doesn't take much discernment to spot when a site is engaged in "site reputation abuse." Presumably, the 12,000 googlers the company fired last year could have been employed to check the top review keyword results manually every couple of days and permaban any site caught cheating this way.
Instead, Google is has announced a change in policy: starting May 5, the company will downrank any site caught engaged in site reputation abuse. However, the company takes a very narrow view of site reputation abuse, limiting punishments to sites that employ third parties to generate or uprank their botshit. Companies that produce their botshit in-house are seemingly not covered by this policy.
As Navarro writes, some sites – like Forbes – have prepared for May 5 by blocking their botshit sections from Google's crawler. This can't be their permanent strategy, though – either they'll have to kill the section or bring it in-house to comply with Google's rules. Bringing things in house isn't that hard: US News and World Report is advertising for an SEO editor who will publish 70-80 posts per month, doubtless each one a masterpiece of high-quality, carefully researched material of great value to Google's users:
https://twitter.com/dannyashton/status/1777408051357585425
As Navarro points out, Google is palpably reluctant to target the largest, best-funded spammers. Its March 2024 update kicked many garbage AI sites out of the index – but only small bottom-feeders, not large, once-respected publications that have been colonized by private equity spam-farmers.
All of this comes at a price, and it's only incidentally paid by legitimate sites like Housefresh. The real price is borne by all of us, who are funneled by the 90%-market-share search engine into "review" sites that push low quality, high-price products. Housefresh's top budget air purifier costs $79. That's hundreds of dollars cheaper than the "budget" pick at other sites, who largely perform no original research.
Google search has a problem. AI botshit is dominating Google's search results, and it's not just in product reviews. Searches for infrastructure code samples are dominated by botshit code generated by Pulumi AI, whose chatbot hallucinates nonexistence AWS features:
https://www.theregister.com/2024/05/01/pulumi_ai_pollution_of_search/
This is hugely consequential: when these "hallucinations" slip through into production code, they create huge vulnerabilities for widespread malicious exploitation:
https://www.theregister.com/2024/03/28/ai_bots_hallucinate_software_packages/
We've put all our eggs in Google's basket, and Google's dropped the basket – but it doesn't matter because they can spend $20b/year bribing Apple to make sure no one ever tries a rival search engine on Ios or Safari:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/google-payments-apple-reached-20-220947331.html
Google's response – laying off core developers, outsourcing to low-waged territories with weak labor protections and spending billions on stock buybacks – presents a picture of a company that is too big to care:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/04/teach-me-how-to-shruggie/#kagi
Google promised us a quid-pro-quo: let them be the single, authoritative portal ("organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful"), and they will earn that spot by being the best search there is:
https://www.ft.com/content/b9eb3180-2a6e-41eb-91fe-2ab5942d4150
But – like the spammers at the top of its search result pages – Google didn't earn its spot at the center of our digital lives.
It cheated.
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/05/03/keyword-swarming/#site-reputation-abuse
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Image: freezelight (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Spam_wall_-_Flickr_-_freezelight.jpg
CC BY-SA 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/deed.en
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aryuacademyoffcial · 1 month ago
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What’s Going On with Google’s March 2025 SEO Update?
Google has changed the game again—this time, for the better.
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Short Videos Are Everywhere These days, when you search for something, short videos often appear before blog posts.
What you can do: Turn your blog posts into quick videos. Share tips, show how-tos, or explain something simple.
Reddit & Real Talks Are Ranking Google is giving priority to real discussions, including posts from Reddit and other forums.
Tip: Join online communities related to your niche. Give valuable answers and contribute regularly.
What to Focus On Now:
Create content that actually solves a problem
Add short videos to your website or pages
Write clearly, with easy-to-follow steps
Stay active online—Google pays attention
Bottom Line: It’s not about writing more. It’s about being real, helpful, and easy to understand.
So, what do you think? Ready to join our SEO or Digital Marketing course at Aryu Academy?
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digiligodigital · 2 years ago
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Google Algorithm Updates
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Early Algorithm Updates (2003–2006) Florida (November 2003) Nofollow (January 2005) Jagger( September 2005) Big Daddy (December 2005)
Mid-2000s Algorithm Updates (2007–2010) Universal Search (May 2007) Vince (February 2009) Caffeine (December 2010) Panda (February 2011)
The Penguin and Hummingbird and Pigeon Era (2012–2013) Penguin (April 2012) Hummingbird (August 2013) Pigeon (July 2014)
Updates to Mobile-Focused Algorithms (2015–2018) Mobile-Friendly Update (April 2015) RankBrain (October 2015) Fred (March 2017) Mobile-First Indexing (March 2018) Recent Algorithm Updates (2018–2023) Medic (August 2018) BERT (October 2019) Broad Core Update (June 2021) Link Spam Update (December 2022)
To Know More About Google Algorithm Updates
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seowoobins · 2 years ago
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231107 : twt update
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trendpulsewire · 1 year ago
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How We Rank Our Website After Google Search Update
Google updates its search system sometimes, and this update might affect your website. Here’s what you can do:
Don’t worry if your website doesn’t do as well after the update. It doesn’t mean you did anything wrong.
Focus on making the best content you can for people, not search engines.
Google has a guide where its mention how google search updates works and its solution to help you create great content [Google Starter Guide]. This guide has questions you can ask yourself to check your own content.
Look at the parts of your website that were most affected by the update. Are there other websites that answer searcher questions better? Maybe they have more experience on the topic.
You can also ask someone you trust to give your website an honest review.
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jahid-75 · 2 years ago
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The September 2023 update is negatively impacting many sites, primarily those with low-quality or unhelpful content. If your site is affected, you can regain favor by improving your content over time. This is challenging news for income-generating bloggers, but those who genuinely help their audience and become passionate authorities in their field can still succeed.
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prasaddhumal82 · 17 days ago
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Google Search Ranking volatility April 22nd and 23rd
SEO professionals and webmasters are once again witnessing significant Google Search ranking volatility over the past few days, particularly between April 21 and April 23, 2025. While there’s no official confirmation of a Google algorithm update during this period, the evidence strongly suggests another round of ranking algorithm testing or adjustments. Unofficial Yet Consistent Volatility Across…
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areswriter · 24 days ago
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Google Core Update Maret 2025: Cara Gue Bertahan dan Naik Rank
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Beberapa minggu lalu, gue mulai ngerasa ada yang aneh. Salah satu artikel gue yang biasanya nangkring di page one, tiba-tiba hilang. Gue cek Search Console, traffic drop. Bukan cuma satu artikel, tapi hampir semua konten di kategori berita dan hiburan.
Awalnya gue kira cuma fluktuasi biasa. Tapi ternyata... ini gara-gara Google Core Update Maret 2025.
Gue mulai ngulik dan bandingin. Ternyata ada pola.
Artikel yang terlalu "SEO banget" yang gue buat dengan gaya lama: keyword masuk di H1, meta, sebar keyword di paragraf awal, dan lain-lain—justru anjlok. Padahal sebelumnya teknik itu selalu berhasil. Tapi sekarang? Kalah sama artikel yang gaya bahasanya lebih natural dan fokus ke pembaca, bukan ke mesin.
Dari situ gue mulai ubah pendekatan. Gue coba riset ulang. Bukan soal keyword doang, tapi gue mulai dari niat: artikel ini bantuin pembaca atau cuma buat dapet traffic?
Gue juga sempet eksperimen pakai AI buat beberapa konten. Tapi kali ini, gue gak copy hasilnya mentah-mentah. Gue ubah, gue tambahin insight pribadi, gue revisi gaya bahasanya biar lebih enak dibaca manusia. Hasilnya? Artikel itu balik naik pelan-pelan. Bahkan satu artikel soal properti yang gue anggap “sepele” malah naik drastis dan sekarang jadi salah satu traffic source tertinggi di blog gue.
Sektor lain kayak berita, e-commerce, bahkan hiburan yang sebelumnya ngasih traffic lumayan, sekarang kayaknya makin susah bersaing. Apalagi lawan kita media-media besar kayak Detik, Tempo, Ares188 bahkan Halodoc pun ikut kena. Tapi ya itu, siapa cepat adaptasi, dia yang bertahan.
Gue gak bilang semua artikel lama harus dihapus. Tapi sekarang gue mulai evaluasi: mana yang harus dirombak total, mana yang cukup dioptimasi ulang. Dan sejauh ini, strategi itu ngebantu banget.
Kalau lo masih pakai pola lama, mungkin ini saatnya mulai berpikir ulang. Fokus ke user experience. Nulis bukan buat ngejar mesin, tapi buat bantu orang yang baca.
Oh ya, beberapa insight dan inspirasi tulisan juga gue dapetin waktu mampir ke www.astriroma.com. Banyak referensi menarik buat yang lagi nyari gaya konten yang lebih genuine dan tetap perform.
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digitalrhetoricpune · 1 month ago
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Understanding Google’s Latest Algorithm Update: A Guide to Smarter SEO
Every time a Google algorithm update rolls out, it reshapes how websites are ranked and discovered online. For businesses relying on digital visibility, staying informed about these changes is vital. Google’s most recent update emphasizes user experience, performance metrics, and content relevance—reshaping the future of search engine optimization.
Why Google Algorithm Updates Matter
Google constantly fine-tunes its algorithm to provide better results to users. The latest Google algorithm update puts even more weight on modern SEO ranking factors that prioritize how people interact with your site. It’s no longer just about keywords—Google wants content that answers questions quickly, loads fast, and provides a seamless experience.
Core Web Vitals: A Major Ranking Signal
A big focus in this update is on Core Web Vitals—a set of performance metrics that gauge the user experience. These include:
Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) – How quickly your main content loads.
First Input Delay (FID) – How fast your site responds to user input.
Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) – How stable your layout is during page load.
These vitals are now essential SEO ranking factors. Google rewards sites that deliver smooth, responsive, and fast-loading experiences. Websites that fall short may see a drop in search visibility.
To improve your Core Web Vitals, consider minimizing code bloat, enabling lazy loading for images, and using a reliable hosting solution. These changes not only help with rankings but also boost user satisfaction.
Elevating Content for Modern SEO
Another key part of this Google algorithm update is the shift toward helpful, human-first content. Google is cracking down on low-value, AI-generated, or keyword-stuffed pages. Instead, it favors original, well-researched content that directly addresses user intent.
As part of your search engine optimization strategy, focus on creating informative content written by experts. Use question-based headings, long-tail keywords, and real-world examples to make your content more useful and engaging.
Trust, Expertise, and Site Authority
Google continues to reward sites that demonstrate Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness (E-A-T)—especially for industries like health, finance, and legal services. This update further refines these signals by incorporating the user's on-page experience into the mix.
Establish credibility by showcasing author credentials, citing reputable sources, and keeping your content accurate and up to date. These trust signals contribute significantly to your SEO ranking factors.
The Future of Search Is AI and Intent
This update also reflects Google's growing ability to understand search intent through AI. Instead of matching exact keywords, Google evaluates the context of each query. That means your content should be written in a conversational, natural tone—designed to help users rather than just rank in search engines.
Final Thoughts
The latest Google algorithm update is a clear reminder: great search engine optimization is about more than just backlinks and keywords. By focusing on Core Web Vitals, producing high-quality content, and aligning with modern SEO ranking factors, businesses can improve their search visibility and user experience.
Want help navigating these changes? Reach out to Digital Rhetoric and future-proof your SEO strategy today.
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cubicalseo · 21 days ago
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Google’s search algorithm is consistently modifying, but 2024 marked a significant turning point. With major core updates and the introduction of AI-driven features, these changes affected millions of websites across the web.
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searchengineexplorer · 2 years ago
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The "August 2023 SEO Core Update" by Google revamped ranking algorithms, emphasizing content quality, user experience, and mobile-friendliness. It led to ranking shifts across industries. Adapting with high-quality content, mobile optimization, and diverse backlinks is key to sustaining online presence.
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promfly · 2 months ago
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digixplanet · 2 months ago
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🚨 Google March 2025 Core Algorithm Update 🚨
Google's newest core algorithm update is now rolling out! How will this affect your website's visibility in the UAE? 🌐📈
🔑 Stay ahead by:
Focusing on quality content 📚
Enhancing user experience 📲
Demonstrating E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authority, Trust) 🏅
Monitoring performance metrics 📊
Staying informed and proactive 🗣️
📌 Dive deeper into what this update means for your business and how you can maintain strong search rankings.
👉 Read the full article here: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/google-march-2025-core-algorithm-update-what-uae-businesses-jqtpe
#GoogleUpdate #SEO #DigitalMarketing #UAE #CoreUpdate #DigixPlanet
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techsavvy-agcy · 2 months ago
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Decoding the Google Core Update, March 2025
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Decoding the Google Core Update, March 2025
On March 13th, 2025, the constantly changing and unforeseeable digital world felt another major shakeup with the release of Google's newest core algorithm update. Just like before, the official explanation of the update was typically unclear, highlighting the continued focus on "rewarding top-notch content" and "enhancing search accuracy." Still, the impact was evident, causing a lot of worry and hurried changes in the SEO field.
This piece explores the effects, some educated guesses, and the best ways to handle the Google Core update from March 13th, 2025. It aims to clarify how the algorithm is changing and what that means for those who run websites and create content.
The Aftermath: Search Results in Flux
Right after the update, the search engine results pages (SERPs) saw some major shifts. Tools that monitor such volatility showed huge jumps, pointing to big changes in rankings across different sectors. Initial reports zeroed in on a few key areas:
E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness): Google has always cared a lot about E-E-A-T in how they judge website quality, but the update in March 2025 seemed to turn up the volume on it. Websites that showed they knew their stuff, had proven expertise, were authoritative, and were super trustworthy did a lot better.
Content Authenticity and Originality: Google seemed to get much stricter about content that AI just cranked out without much original thought or real value. Sites that used a bunch of rehashed content, rewritten articles, or stuff that looked like it came straight from an AI template saw their rankings take a nosedive.
User Experience (UX) and Page Experience: Things like how fast your site loads, if it's easy to use on mobile, and overall how user-friendly it is were way more important after the update. Slow websites, had annoying pop-ups or were a pain to use on phones got dinged.
Contextual Relevance and Semantic Understanding: Google's update appeared to fine-tune its capacity for grasping the context and purpose embedded within search queries. Sites that provided comprehensive, in-depth content that addressed the nuances of user searches saw improvements.
Data Driven Content: Websites that used first party data to personalize and improve user experiences, and that used data to back up claims, saw significant improvements.
Analyzing the Algorithm's Evolving Priorities
The Rise of "Human-Centric" Content: The update reinforced the notion that Google is prioritizing content created by humans, for humans. This goes beyond simply avoiding AI-generated text; it emphasizes the importance of genuine insights, personal experiences, and a conversational tone.
Emphasis on Real-World Experience: The "Experience" element of E-E-A-T took center stage. This suggests that Google is placing greater value on content creators who have real-world experience in the topics they cover. First hand accounts and demonstrations of real world product usage were rewarded.
Combatting Misinformation and Disinformation: In an era of rampant misinformation, Google appeared to be strengthening its defenses against unreliable or misleading content. This involved stricter scrutiny of sources, a greater emphasis on fact-checking, and a preference for content from established authorities.
The Importance of Contextual Understanding: The upgrade demonstrated Google's developing capacity to understand linguistic nuances and the context of user enquiries. This shows that semantic SEO and topic clustering are becoming more important.
Privacy and User Data: With growing user concern about privacy, Google's algorithm appears to be rewarding sites with clear data-gathering policies that prioritize customer privacy.
Video and Multimedia: Video content, especially content that is original, well produced, and engaging, got a large boost in rankings. Long form, well edited videos, that are not just re-purposed content, were very well received by the algorithm.
Emerging Best Practices for the Post-March 2025 Landscape
In the wake of the update, website owners and content creators were forced to adapt their strategies. The following best practices emerged as essential for navigating the evolving search landscape:
Prioritize E-E-A-T: Focus on increasing your brand's authority and trustworthiness. Display your knowledge through author profiles, credentials, and real-world experience. Seek expert contributions and endorsements.
Create Original, High-Quality Content: Invest in original research, in-depth analysis, and distinctive opinions. Avoid using AI-generated content that lacks originality or value.
Optimize the user experience:  Make sure your website is speedy, mobile-friendly, and simple to navigate. Address Core Web Vitals concerns and prioritize a consistent user experience.
Embrace semantic SEO: Create content that takes into account the complexities of user intent and search query context. Topic clustering and semantic keywords can help you develop topical authority.
Build Authentic Backlinks: Concentrate on obtaining high-quality backlinks from credible sources. Avoid using black-hat link-building strategies.
Focus on Data and Transparency:  Show users how data is gathered and used. Ensure that privacy policies are explicit and user data is secure.
Invest in Video Content: Make high-quality, engaging videos that add value to your viewers. Optimize videos for search and make them accessible.
Monitor and Adapt: Stay up to current on algorithm updates, and regularly monitor the performance of your website. Prepare to adapt your strategies as needed.
Focus on First-Party Data: Collect and use first-party data to tailor the customer experience. This enables more targeted content and a better experience.
Create a Community:  Create a user community centered around your brand. This can be accomplished using social media, forums, and other online channels. Strong communities generate social signals, which Google values.
The long-term implications
The Google core upgrade on March 13th, 2025, marked a substantial shift in the algorithm's objectives, emphasizing the significance of human-centric information, genuine expertise, and a user-first approach. As Google improves its comprehension of language and user intent, website owners and content providers must adapt to the changing standards.
The update is likely to have the following long-term implications:
A More Level Playing Field for Smaller Websites: By emphasizing E-E-A-T and original material, Google may level the playing field for smaller websites that can demonstrate actual expertise and offer distinctive value.
A Decline in Low-Quality, AI-Generated Content: The crackdown on AI-generated content is expected to result in a decrease in low-quality, spammy content that clutters the SERPs.
A Greater Emphasis on User Experience: Google's continuous emphasis on UX is likely to result in overall improvements in website design and performance.
A More Contextually Relevant Search Experience: Google's improved semantic understanding is expected to result in a more relevant and fulfilling search experience for users.
A renewed focus on the human element of content creation: The value of real people, and their real-world experiences, will only continue to increase.
In conclusion, the March 13th, 2025, Google core update served as a stark reminder of the dynamic nature of the digital landscape. By prioritizing E-E-A-T, originality, user experience, and contextual understanding, Google is pushing website owners and content creators to embrace a more human-centric and value-driven approach. Those who can adapt to these evolving standards will be well-positioned to thrive in the years to come. The future of search is focused on genuine human connection and genuine human experience.
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